Styrbiorn the Strong

by E.R. Eddison

Reviewed by David Maclaine

Styrbiorn the Strong is
a novel of rare beauty and power, elegant in style and full of tragic grandeur.
The tale itself is simple, with the logic and inevitability of Greek tragedy.
It is the story of a proud and precocious young prince, a boy muscular enough
to wrestle with his pet musk ox in his spare time, who grows impatient for the
share of the Swedish throne promised by his uncle when he reaches age sixteen.
He heads to sea while he waits, and in three years becomes a renowned and
feared Viking leader, a threat to neighboring kings. His hopes for a peaceful
homecoming are complicated by Sigrid, a youthful friend who becomes his uncle
Eric's queen. Three times Styrbiorn returns to Sweden; his final homecoming
brings bloody war and the climax of a famous battle.

Author E.R. Eddison is best known for his fantasy
novel The Worm Ouroboros. I had tried
the first few pages of that work a long time ago, when it appeared in paperback
with cover art resembling that on the Tolkien paperbacks. I set it down again
quickly, put off by a style whose unflagging use of "thee" and "thou"
felt badly outdated. There's a certain amount of that in Styrbiorn the Strong, but the influence of Icelandic sagas gives
the work such a hard spine that a little archaic language does no harm. Eddison's
style is rich, with long, lyrical sentences that will delight those who
appreciate sheer beauty of language. The tale mostly follows the traditional
Norse sources, but Sigrid's role in the tragedy is the author's invention.
Though richer in language than the Icelandic models, the novel mirrors their
stern objectivity and refusal to take sides. The result is a work not merely of
entertainment but of art. (1926; 264 pages in the recent University of
Minnesota Press edition)

The Soul Thief by Cecelia Holland (2002), about a Viking who sets out to rescue his abducted sister, purchased by a sorceress who covets her magical powers; some events in the story are based on the tales of Eric Bloodaxe from the Heimskringla; #1 in the Soul Thief series. See review or more info at Amazon.com

Odinn's Child by Tim Severin (2005), about a son of Leif Ericson and a Celtic mother who arrives in Greenland in 1001, is raised as a pagan, and fights against Brian Boru in the Battle of Clontarf; based on the Eyrbyggja Saga; #1 in the Viking trilogy. More info

Wolfsangel by M.D. Lachlan (2010), historical fantasy about two brothers kidnapped as infants and raised by Vikings; based on a Norse myth. More info